European Parliament votes in favor of non-financial reporting in annual reports

CDSB welcomes the European Parliament decision on corporate reporting.

Today’s European Parliament decision to increase corporate transparency has the potential to identify previously hidden environmental risks, impact international climate change negotiations and harmonise increasing regulation by European Member States on corporate reporting of non-financial information.

CDSB has the only currently available methodology specifically designed to support companies report this kind of information in their mainstream reports and comply with the new regulations. CDSB has been advocating use of its Framework for reporting of environmental information in mainstream financial reports since 2007. We welcome the vote today as an important step in this journey and look forward to working with many more companies on implementing the CDSB reporting Framework, as well as assisting the European Commission develop additional guidance on non-financial reporting practices.

The decision which will affect approximately 6,000 European companies who will shortly be required to include a statement in their mainstream financial reports, detailing their current and foreseeable impacts on the environment, focusing on renewable and non-renewable energy, greenhouse gas emissions, water use and pollution.

The approval by the European Parliament marks the approval of a proposal from the European Commission to amend the Accounting Directives (Fourth and Seventh Accounting Directives on Annual and Consolidated Accounts, 78/660/EEC and 83/349/EEC, respectively). In addition to greater transparency on environmental issues, companies will also be required to disclose information dealing with social and employee-related matters, respect for human rights, anti-corruption, bribery issues and diversity on the boards of directors. CDSB and CDP actively promoted this proposal with several other European organisations including Aviva, ACCA, WBCSD, ECCJ, EuroSIF and others.

The outcome of the European Parliament vote today also has potential to impact on international climate change negotiations as part of the UNFCCC process, whereby the UN Secretary General has specifically asked the corporate sector to catalyse ambitious actions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, ahead of the UN Climate Summit in New York in September 2014.

CDSB's Executive Director Lois Guthrie said: “CDSB's experience shows that transparency is a key driver towards good leadership and management, trust, overall company performance and good capital allocation decisions over the mid and long-term The EU must now focus its efforts to ensure that the implementation of these new requirements across the member states will result in consistent and comparable reports by companies to ensure that they are suitable for analysis by the investor community”.

With a few weeks left until the official release of the draft set of recommendations for companies to disclose climate-related financial information, we round up the main questions that will help you understand what they mean and why this matters.